Ask any of the Golden State Warriors about their vaunted offense, or about Steve Kerr’s passing project when he took over as coach in the summer of 2014, and they all say it comes down to that basketball truth. Move the ball once, and you move a defender. Move it a few more times, and it’s as if Luke Skywalker himself is forcing the entire defense off the floor. Commit to this selfless style, and even Bill Russell’s Boston Celtics wouldn’t be able to stop this high-scoring system.

Therein lies the most compelling question of the Western Conference finals between Golden State and Houston that begins Monday.

While the James Harden and Chris Paul-led Rockets are the experts of isolation, the Warriors have long since decided that passing is the key to unleashing their offense. Ever since Kerr made the move from TNT analyst to the Warriors bench, when he saw the glaring lack of ball movement in that final season under former coach Mark Jackson and told the team’s ownership how he would fix it, this has been their ethos. So much so, in fact, that it all started with a magic number: 300.

Pass the ball at least that many times during the course of a game, he told them, and the offense will hum. For Kerr, who won five titles while playing for San Antonio’s Gregg Popovich and then-Chicago coach Phil Jackson, these were the lessons learned that he had to pass on.

“If you have shooting — if you have great shooting — then the more ball movement the better, because you have guys coming off screens and … you want to make the defense have to defend for long stretches rather than just one pass and a shot,” Kerr explained to USA TODAY Sports recently. “So we looked at the passing totals, and … (300) was a really key number for us.

“I just said I want the ball to move. That’s always how I’ve seen the game, and if you have Steph (Curry) and Klay (Thompson) on your team and the ball is moving, it’s fairly obvious that it’s going to be hard to defend. So we just kind of came up with that number.”

The proof is in the passing.

► After ranking last in passes per game (243.8) during the regular season before Kerr’s hiring and finishing 12th in offensive rating despite already having three of their four current All-Stars in Curry, Thompson and Draymond Green, they have had the league’s best offense in three of the past four seasons while finishing second in offensive rating once. During that span, the Warriors’ passes-per-game mark has ranged from 306.6 to 323.5.

► The Warriors’ only two losses this postseason have come in the only games in which they passed the ball fewer than 300 times (256 against San Antonio in Game 4 of the first round; 295 against New Orleans in Game 3 of the second round). In all, they lead all playoff teams in passing (323.2; Rockets 15th at 227.5).

► Green and Curry have been first and second among the Warriors, respectively, in passes made for the past three regular seasons.

Yet the impact of Kerr’s system has been far more profound than the box score could ever indicate. It had everything to do with the Warriors landing Kevin Durant in free agency during the summer of 2016. The former MVP was widely known to be drawn to Golden State’s egalitarian system, one that was so different from the ball-pounding ways he’d grown accustomed to playing alongside Russell Westbrook in Oklahoma City.

Consider the picture that was painted in the season prior to Durant’s decision: The Thunder, who fell to Golden State in seven games during those Western Conference finals, were last in passes per game during the regular season (256.6) and playoffs (220.4). Durant, like the rest of the Warriors, wanted to play a more free-flowing brand of basketball.

Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant celebrate during a game against the Mavericks.(Photo: Jerome Miron, USA TODAY Sports)

Thompson has always appreciated the art of the pass, but his true ah-ha moment came during one of those early practices during Kerr’s first season when the new coach stopped a dribbling drill to share a simple message.

“He would just stop the drill and say, ‘Look around. Literally every man on this team can (dribble well). That’s not the case for every team, so just trust your teammates and make the extra pass because it’s going to come out in the wash and we’ll be successful,’” Thompson recalled. “That’s when I started believing.”

There was also an assist from advanced technology. These sorts of stats weren’t easily attainable until SportVU cameras that track every angle of the game were installed in NBA arenas shortly before Kerr took over. Sammy Gelfand, the Warriors’ analytics manager, helped set up this pivotal play too.

Gelfand, who worked for the Warriors’ D-League team from 2011 to 2013 and joined Golden State in Jackson’s final season, is the author of the postgame scouting report that always leads with the latest game’s passing total. Kerr used to pound this point every day,

As the Warriors became more committed to this concept, their team-wide goal grew as well: They now aim for 320 passes per game, or roughly three per possession.

“I think the number helps reaffirm (the message) in their minds,” Gelfand said. “So 300 was the target that first year, and I think as we’ve evolved we kind of expect more and more. In (the players’) minds, they visualize it very well, and same with our coaches.”

In some ways, this Warriors experience is a perfect example of how best to use advanced statistics. The straightforward nature of the number made it easy for players to embrace the strategy, and now many of them have developed a sixth sense.

“It’s amazing how good of a feel they have,” Gelfand said. “I remember a couple times after games, guys would be like, ‘I don’t think we got it.’ Especially early on (in 2014). Once they started to figure out the 300 games, and how they did, vs. the non-300 games, it was incredible to me how they picked it up.”

Added Green: “Most of the time when we don’t hit that mark, you can feel it and you know going into the next day in the film session that ‘We didn’t play that well,’ and that number will come up and it’s like, ‘Yeah, it figures. It was nasty.’ It just kind of becomes more instinctual.

“Even if you weren’t necessarily a great shooter, you were still a threat, and that’s kind of what this has blossomed into.”

As Green is quick to point out, passing alone is not enough. The Warriors at their best are like a basketball version of the Blue Angels, with players darting to and fro while stopping only briefly to set a few screens along the way. But when you combine the movement with the passing and some of the best scorers the game has ever seen, then push the tempo, it’s the kind of thing even Kerr couldn’t have dreamt of when he put this program into place.